5x7. Photographs by William Eggleston. Interview with Michael Almereyda. Twin Palms Publishers, Santa Fe, 2006. 96 pp. Small folio (11x14 in./28 x 35 cm.) First printing. SIGNED on colophon page. Clothbound in photo-illustrated dust jacket. 29 black-and-white and 32 full-color reproductions.
Accompanied by two-sided folded poster (15 x 22 in./38 x 56 cm.)) for two Eggleston films: his own 'Stranded in Canton' on one side, and the other for the documentary 'William Eggleston in the Real World.'

From the publisher: "William Eggleston’s latest monograph features photographs taken during the early 1970s using a large format 5x7 camera. While the book includes imagery typical of the Eggleston oeuvre– streetscapes, parked automobiles, portraits of the strange and disenfranchised–the book also offers never-before-published photographs taken in the nightclubs Eggleston used to frequent.

'With it (his camera and portable strobes) Eggleston could shoot in virtual darkness in the juke joints and clubs around Memphis. The portraits are offhand and spontaneous but insistently stark; their brutality is heightened by the absence of color. The portraits have a leveling effect–whether biker or debutante, the people Eggleston photographed are clearly denizens of the same realm. (He) is reminding us: look closely, each of these individuals is subtly different.--Walter Hopps
'Riveting as the sitters’ accoutrements are, most compelling is the way in which each person is at once magnified–laid bare and vulnerable. . . . Staring, smiling, grimacing, glowering, these are less portraits of “individuals” than of the expressions that settle fleetingly on their malleable features. Each face feels stranger and more physically ambivalent than the next.'--Johanna Burtxon, Artforum '"